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ABSTRACT: The early stages of Triton X-100 solubilization of bilayers consisting of sphingomyelin/ceramide (SM/Cer) mixtures have been studied using a combination of calorimetric and spectroscopic techniques. Compositions based on sphingomyelin, containing up to 30 mol% Cer, at 4, 20 and 50°C have been examined. The presence of Cer does not modify the affinity (in terms of ΔG of binding per mol total lipid) of the SM-based bilayers for Triton X-100, although it does increase the amount of detergent required for the onset of solubilization. At 50°C more detergent was required to solubilize the SM/Cer bilayers than at 20°C. The data can be rationalized in terms of lipid and detergent geometries and interactions [Lichtenberg et al., 2013].
Chemistry and physics of lipids 02/2013; · 2.15 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Although detergents are routine tools in biomembrane research, their use remains empirical. We propose that solubilization is the result of a balance between two parameters: (i) the energy associated with bending of phospholipid monolayers into a curved micellar surface, and (ii) the energy associated with filling the void in the center of the resultant mixed micelle. In this review, we show that reliable data on the phase boundaries, and their dependence on various conditions, are consistent with this hypothesis, even if the data might have been interpreted differently. Although most of the experimental data discussed here were obtained with the non-ionic detergent Triton X-100, the conclusions should be applicable to a wide variety of detergents.
Trends in Biochemical Sciences 01/2013; · 10.85 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: When giant unilamellar vesicles (GUV) composed of sphingomyelin, phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine, and cholesterol are treated with PlcHR(2), a phospholipase C/sphingomyelinase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa, the initial stages of lipid hydrolysis do not cause large changes in vesicle morphology (Ibarguren et al., 2011). However, when hydrolysis progresses confocal fluorescence microscopy reveals the formation of lipid aggregates, whose morphology is not compatible with that of bilayers. Smaller vesicles or droplets can also be seen inside the GUV. Our studies indicate that these aggregates or droplets are enriched in the non-lamellar lipid ceramide, an end-product of PlcHR(2) reaction. Moreover, the aggregates/droplets appear enriched in the hydrolytic enzyme PlcHR(2). At a final stage GUVs containing the enzyme-enriched droplets disintegrate and vanish from the microscope field. The observed non-lamellar enzyme-rich structures may be related to intermediates in the process of aggregation and fusion although the experimental design prevents vesicle free diffusion in the aqueous medium, thus actual aggregation or fusion cannot be observed.
Chemistry and physics of lipids 12/2012; · 2.15 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Ceramide analogues containing azide groups either in the polar head or in the hydrocarbon chains are non-fluorescent. When incorporated into phospholipid bilayers, they can react in situ with a non-fluorescent 1,8-naphthalimide using click chemistry giving rise to fluorescent ceramide derivatives emitting at ≈440 nm. When incorporated into giant unilamellar vesicles, two-photon excitation at 760 nm allows visualization of the ceramide-containing bilayers. This kind of method may be of general applicability in the study of model and cell membranes.
Journal of Chemical Biology 07/2012; 5(3):119-23.
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ABSTRACT: It has been repeatedly observed that lipid bilayers in the gel phase are solubilized by lower concentrations of Triton X-100, at least within certain temperature ranges, or other nonionic detergents than bilayers in the fluid phase. In a previous study, we showed that detergent partition coefficients into the lipid bilayer were the same for the gel and the fluid phases. In this contribution, turbidity, calorimetry, and 31P-NMR concur in showing that bilayers in the gel state (at least down to 13-20°C below the gel-fluid transition temperature) become saturated with detergent at lower detergent concentrations than those in the fluid state, irrespective of temperature. The different saturation may explain the observed differences in solubilization.
Biophysical Journal 06/2012; 102(11):2510-6. · 3.65 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: We propose that accumulated membrane bending energy elicits a neutral sphingomyelinase (SMase) activity in human erythrocytes. Membrane bending was achieved by osmotic or chemical processes, and SMase activity was assessed by quantitative thin-layer chromatography, high-performance liquid chromatography, and electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry. The activity induced by hypotonic stress in erythrocyte membranes had the pH dependence, ion dependence, and inhibitor sensitivity of mammalian neutral SMases. The activity caused a decrease in SM contents, with a minimum at 6 min after onset of the hypotonic conditions, and then the SM contents were recovered. We also elicited SMase activity by adding lysophosphatidylcholine externally or by generating it with phospholipase A(2). The same effect was observed upon addition of chlorpromazine or sodium deoxycholate at concentrations below the critical micellar concentration, and even under hypertonic conditions. A unifying factor of the various agents that elicit this SMase activity is the accumulated membrane bending energy. Both hypo-and hypertonic conditions impose an increased curvature, whereas the addition of surfactants or phospholipase A(2) activation increases the outer monolayer area, thus leading to an increased bending energy. The fact that this latent SMase activity is tightly coupled to the membrane bending properties suggests that it may be related to the general phenomenon of stress-induced ceramide synthesis and apoptosis.
Biophysical Journal 05/2012; 102(9):2077-85. · 3.65 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: This review article deals with phospholipases C (PLC), sphingomyelinases (SMases) and related lipases. Bacterial PC-preferring PLC and PI-specific PLC, bacterial SMases and PLC/SMases, eukaryotic SMases and ceramide phosphorylinositol hydrolases are discussed. The aim of the review is to offer a coherent description of lipid-protein interactions for the above enzymes, considering that (a) the enzyme activity is influenced by the physical properties of the substrate lipid, (b) the enzyme activity is modulated by non-substrate lipids, (c) enzyme end-products often change the physical properties of the lipid matrix, hence the enzyme activity. This approach allows a certain degree of understanding of phenomena such as: latency periods (lag times), enzyme interfacial activation, effects of intrinsic lipid curvature and of overall bilayer curvature on enzyme activity, and enzyme-promoted vesicle aggregation and fusion.
Progress in lipid research 04/2012; 51(3):238-66. · 10.67 Impact Factor
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Biophysical Journal 01/2012; · 3.65 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Clostridium perfringens phospholipase C (CpPLC), also called α-toxin, is the main virulence factor for gas gangrene in humans. The lipase activity serves the bacterium to generate lipid signals in the host eukaryotic cell, and ultimately to degrade the host cell membranes. Several previous reports indicated that CpPLC was specific for phosphatidylcholine and sphingomyelin. Molecular docking studies described in this paper predict favorable interactions of the CpPLC active site with other phospholipids, e.g. phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylinositol and, to a lesser extent, phosphatidylglycerol. On the basis of these predictions, we have performed experimental studies showing α-toxin to degrade all the phospholipids mentioned above. The molecular docking data also provide an explanation for the observed lower activity of CpPCL on sphingomyelin as compared to the glycerophospholipids.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 06/2011; 1808(10):2618-27. · 4.66 Impact Factor
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Biophysical Journal 01/2011; 100:634. · 3.65 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: α-Toxin, a major determinant of Clostridium perfringens toxicity, exhibits both phospholipase C and sphingomyelinase activities. Our studies with large unilamellar vesicles containing a variety of lipid mixtures reveal that both lipase activities are enhanced by cholesterol and by lipids with an intrinsic negative curvature, e.g. phosphatidylethanolamine. Conversely lysophospholipids, that possess a positive intrinsic curvature, inhibit the α-toxin lipase activities. Phospholipids with a net negative charge do not exert any major effect on the lipase activities, and the same lack of effect is seen with the lysosomal lipid bis (monoacylglycero) phosphate. Ganglioside GT1b has a clear inhibitory effect, while the monosialic ganglioside GM3 is virtually ineffectual even when incorporated at 6mol % in the vesicles. The length of the lag periods appears to be inversely related to the maximum (post-lag) enzyme activities. Moreover, and particularly in the presence of cholesterol, lag times increase with pH. Both lipase activities are sensitive to vesicle size, but in opposite ways: while phospholipase C is higher with larger vesicles, sphingomyelinase activity is lower. The combination of our results with previous structural studies suggests that α-toxin lipase activities have distinct, but partially overlapping and interacting active sites.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 01/2011; 1808(1):279-86. · 4.66 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The binding and early stages of activity of a phospholipase C/sphingomyelinase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa on giant unilamellar vesicles (GUV) have been monitored using fluorescence confocal microscopy. Both the lipids and the enzyme were labeled with specific fluorescent markers. GUV consisted of a mixture of phosphatidylcholine, sphingomyelin, phosphatidylethanolamine, and cholesterol in equimolar ratios, to which 5-10 mol% of the enzyme end-product ceramide and/or diacylglycerol were occasionally added. Morphological examination of the GUV in the presence of enzyme reveals that, although the enzyme diffuses rapidly throughout the observation chamber, detectable enzyme binding appears to be a slow, random process, with new bound-enzyme-containing vesicles appearing for several minutes. Enzyme binding to the vesicles appears to be a cooperative process. After the initial cluster of bound enzyme is detected, further binding and catalytic activity follow rapidly. After the activity has started, the enzyme is not released by repeated washing, suggesting a "scooting" mechanism for the hydrolytic activity. The enzyme preferentially binds the more disordered domains, and, in most cases, the catalytic activity causes the disordering of the other domains. Simultaneously, peanut- or figure-eight-shaped vesicles containing two separate lipid domains become spherical. At a further stage of lipid hydrolysis, lipid aggregates are formed and vesicles disintegrate.
The Journal of Lipid Research 01/2011; 52(4):635-45. · 5.56 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The activity of phospholipase C/sphingomyelinase HR(2) (PlcHR(2)) from Pseudomonas aeruginosa was characterized on a variety of substrates. The enzyme was assayed on liposomes (large unilamellar vesicles) composed of PC:SM:Ch:X (1:1:1:1; mol ratio) where X could be PE, PS, PG, or CL. Activity was measured directly as disappearance of substrate after TLC lipid separation. Previous studies had suggested that PlcHR(2) was active only on PC or SM. However we found that, of the various phospholipids tested, only PS was not a substrate for PlcHR(2). All others were degraded, in an order of preference PC>SM>CL>PE>PG. PlcHR(2) activity was sensitive to the overall lipid composition of the bilayer, including non-substrate lipids.
Chemistry and physics of lipids 11/2010; 164(1):78-82. · 2.15 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Cholesterol incorporation into lipid bilayers, in the form of multilamellar vesicles or extruded large unilamellar vesicles, has been quantitated. To this aim, the cholesterol contents of bilayers prepared from phospholipid:cholesterol mixtures 33-75 mol% cholesterol have been measured and compared with the original mixture before lipid hydration. There is a great diversity of cases, but under most conditions the actual cholesterol proportion present in the extruded bilayers is much lower than predicted. A quantitative analysis of the vesicles is thus required before any experimental study is undertaken.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 09/2010; 1798(9):1735-8. · 4.66 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: A set of different biophysical approaches has been used to explore the phase behavior of palmitoylsphingomyelin (pSM)/cholesterol (Chol) model membranes in the presence and absence of palmitoylceramide (pCer). Fluorescence spectroscopy of di-4-ANEPPDHQ-stained pSM/Chol vesicles and atomic force microscopy of supported planar bilayers show gel L(beta)/liquid-ordered (L(o)) phase coexistence within the range X(Chol) = 0-0.25 at 22 degrees C. At the latter compositional point and beyond, a single L(o) pSM/Chol phase is detected. In ternary pSM/Chol/pCer mixtures, differential scanning calorimetry of multilamellar vesicles and confocal fluorescence microscopy of giant unilamellar vesicles concur in showing immiscibility, but no displacement, between L(o) cholesterol-enriched (pSM/Chol) and gel-like ceramide-enriched (pSM/pCer) phases at high pSM/(Chol + pCer) ratios. At higher cholesterol content, pCer is unable to displace cholesterol at any extent, even at X(Chol) < 0.25. It is interesting that an opposite strong cholesterol-mediated pCer displacement from its tight packing with pSM is clearly detected, completely abolishing the pCer ability to generate large microdomains and giving rise instead to a single ternary phase. These observations in model membranes in the absence of the lipids commonly used to form a liquid-disordered phase support the role of cholesterol as the key determinant in controlling its own displacement from L(o) domains by ceramide upon sphingomyelinase activity.
Biophysical Journal 08/2010; 99(4):1119-28. · 3.65 Impact Factor
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Catarina R Vieira,
Jose M Munoz-Olaya,
Jesús Sot,
Sonia Jiménez-Baranda,
Nuria Izquierdo-Useros,
Jose Luis Abad,
Beatriz Apellániz,
Rafael Delgado,
Javier Martinez-Picado, Alicia Alonso,
Josefina Casas,
José L Nieva,
Gemma Fabriás,
Santos Mañes,
Félix M Goñi
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ABSTRACT: The lateral organization of lipids in cell membranes is thought to regulate numerous cell processes. Most studies focus on the coexistence of two fluid phases, the liquid crystalline (l(d)) and the liquid-ordered (l(o)); the putative presence of gel domains (s(o)) is not usually taken into account. We show that in phospholipid:sphingolipid:cholesterol mixtures, in which sphingomyelin (SM) promoted fluid l(o) domains, dihydrosphingomyelin (DHSM) tended to form rigid domains. Genetic and pharmacological blockade of the dihydroceramide desaturase (Des1), which replaced SM with DHSM in cultured cells, inhibited cell infection by replication-competent and -deficient HIV-1. Increased DHSM levels gave rise to more rigid membranes, resistant to the insertion of the gp41 fusion peptide, thus inhibiting viral-cell membrane fusion. These results clarify the function of dihydrosphingolipids in biological membranes and identify Des1 as a potential target in HIV-1 infection.
Chemistry & biology 07/2010; 17(7):766-75. · 6.52 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: This paper reviews the current knowledge on the various mechanisms for transbilayer, or flip-flop, lipid motion in model and cell membranes, enzyme-assisted lipid transfer by flippases, floppases and scramblases is briefly discussed, while non-catalyzed lipid flip-flop is reviewed in more detail. Transbilayer lipid motion may occur as a result of the insertion of foreign molecules (detergents, lipids, or even proteins) in one of the membrane leaflets. It may also be the result of the enzymatic generation of lipids, e.g. diacylglycerol or ceramide, at one side of the membrane. Transbilayer motion rates decrease in the order diacylglycerol>ceramide>phospholipids. Ceramide, but not diacylglycerol, can induce transbilayer motion of other lipids, and bilayer scrambling. Transbilayer lipid diffusion and bilayer scrambling are defined as two conceptually and mechanistically different processes. The mechanism of scrambling appears to be related to local instabilities caused by the non-lamellar ceramide molecule, or by other molecules that exhibit a relatively slow flip-flop rate, when asymmetrically inserted or generated in one of the monolayers in a cell or model membrane.
FEBS letters 05/2010; 584(9):1779-86. · 3.54 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Soluble amphiphiles, or detergents, are known to produce a number of structural and dynamic effects on membranes, even at concentrations below those causing membrane solubilization (i.e. in the so-called stage I of detergent-membrane interaction). The main subsolubilizing detergent effects on membranes are transmembrane lipid motion (flip-flop), breakdown of the membrane permeability barrier (leakage), and vesicle lysis/reassembly. For a proper understanding of membrane solubilization by detergents, it is important to assess whether the various effects seen at subsolubilizing surfactant concentrations occur independently from each other or are interconnected by cause-effect relationships so that they can be interpreted as necessary steps in the overall process of solubilization. To answer this question, we have explored the three above-mentioned effects (i.e., flip-flop, leakage, and lysis/reassembly) apart from solubilization in model (large unilamellar vesicles) and cell (erythrocyte) membranes. Five structurally different surfactants, namely, chlorpromazine, imipramine, Triton X-100, sodium dodecylsulfate, and sodium deoxycholate have been used. Each of them behaves in a unique way. Our results reveal that lipid flip-flop, vesicle leakage, and vesicle lysis/reassembly occur independently between them and with respect to bilayer solubilization so that they cannot be considered to be necessary parts of a higher-order unified process of membrane solubilization by detergents.
Langmuir 02/2010; 26(10):7307-13. · 4.19 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) constitute a cell-sized model membrane system that allows direct visualization of particular membrane-related phenomena, such as domain formation, at the level of single vesicles using fluorescence microscopy-related techniques. Currently available protocols for the preparation of GUVs work only at very low salt concentrations, thus precluding experimentation under physiological conditions. In addition, the GUVs thus obtained lack membrane compositional asymmetry. Here we show how to prepare GUVs using a new protocol based on the electroformation method either from native membranes or organic lipid mixtures at physiological ionic strength. Additionally, we describe methods to test whether membrane proteins and glycosphingolipids preserve their natural orientation after electroformation of GUVs composed of native membranes.
Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.) 01/2010; 606:105-14.
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ABSTRACT: A phospholipase C/sphingomyelinase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa has been assayed on vesicles containing phosphatidylcholine, sphingomyelin, phosphatidylethanolamine and cholesterol at equimolar ratios. The enzyme activity modifies the bilayer chemical composition giving rise to diacylglycerol (DAG) and ceramide (Cer). Assays of enzyme activity, enzyme-induced aggregation and fusion have been performed. Ultrastructural evidence of vesicle fusion at various stages of the process is presented, based on cryo-EM observations. The two enzyme lipidic end-products, DAG and Cer, have opposite effects on the bilayer physical properties; the former abolishes lateral phase separation, while the latter generates a new gel phase [Sot et al., FEBS Lett. 582, 3230-3236 (2008)]. Addition of either DAG, or Cer, or both to the liposome mixture causes an increase in enzyme binding to the bilayers and a decrease in lag time of hydrolysis. These two lipids also have different effects on the enzyme activity, DAG enhancing enzyme-induced vesicle aggregation and fusion, Cer inhibiting the hydrolytic activity. These effects are explained in terms of the different physical properties of the two lipids. DAG increases bilayers fluidity and decreases lateral separation of lipids, thus increasing enzyme activity and substrate accessibility to the enzyme. Cer has the opposite effect mainly because of its tendency to sequester sphingomyelin, an enzyme substrate, into rigid domains, presumably less accessible to the enzyme.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 11/2009; 1798(1):59-64. · 4.66 Impact Factor